Mt. Zion Cemetery

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Mt. Zion Cemetery
Mt. Zion Cemetery (Entrance).jpg
Entrance of the Mt. Zion Cemetery
Details
Established1856
Location
190 South Wall Street, Kingston, New York

Mt. Zion Cemetery (c. 1856-1967) is a historic African-American cemetery owned by the AME Zion Church. The cemetery is on a 2.4-acre (0.97 ha) lot located at 190 South Wall Street in the city of Kingston. It is in the city's Fifth Ward, is less than a mile south of the church.

History[]

Established in the mid-nineteenth century, the cemetery provides a final resting place for prominent individuals and families who were part of Kingston's African American community. Due to the legacy of Slavery in the Hudson Valley, many of the surnames were Dutch, French Huguenot, and British given by the families who had enslaved them. The first burial was in 1856 (Samuel Tappan) and the last (known) burial was in 1967 (Beatrice Fitzgerald).[1]

Currently, there are 104 grave markers, and an estimated 13 of which were born prior to manumission in New York State (signed into law on July 4, 1827).  The Mt. Zion Cemetery also holds the remains of many African-American veterans, including 26 Union soldiers from the Civil War. They were in the ranks of the 11th, 20th, 27th and 39th Regiments of the United States Colored Infantry (USCT) who were laid to rest there from 1865 to 1911 (est). The cemetery also holds the remains of four African-American veterans from the First World War, and two from World War II, and several “Buffalo Soldiers”.[2]

A notable person was Rev. Jeremiah R.B. Smith. Smith was a soldier, anti-slavery writer, and pastor at the AME Zion Church of Kingston.[3]

On December 3, 2020 both Mt. Zion Cemetery and AME Zion Church of Kingston were listed on the NYS SHPO. The cemetery was previously listed as a historic site by the City of Kingston's Historic Landmark Commission in 1983.[1]

References[]

  1. ^ a b City of Kingston Historic Landmarks Preservation Commission, letter from Suzanne Cahill, Planning Director to R. Daniel Mackey, Deputy Commissioner for Historic Preservation, OPRHP, November 25, 2020, 3.
  2. ^ Diamond, Joseph E. (November 13, 2012). "Owned in Life, Owned in Death: The Pine Street African and African-American Burial Ground in Kingston, New York". Northeast Historical Archaeology. 35 – via Digital Commons at Buffalo State.
  3. ^ “Biography of Jeremiah R.B. Smith”. The AFRO- AMERICAN PRESS.1888

Coordinates: 41°55′8.5″N 74°0′42.3″W / 41.919028°N 74.011750°W / 41.919028; -74.011750

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